explorers: poverty-explorer-2011-vs-2017-ppp
This data as json
slug | isPublished | config | createdAt | updatedAt |
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Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $1 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_100_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $1.90 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_190_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1.90 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $3.20 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_320_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.20 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $5.50 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_550_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $5.50 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $10 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_1000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $20 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_2000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $30 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_3000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $40 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_4000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $1 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_100_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $2.15 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_215_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $3.65 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_365_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $6.85 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_685_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $10 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_1000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $20 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_2000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $30 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_3000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $40 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_4000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $1 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_100_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $1.90 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_190_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1.90 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $3.20 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_320_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.20 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $5.50 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_550_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $5.50 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $10 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_1000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $20 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_2000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $30 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_3000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $40 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_4000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $1 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_100_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $1 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $2.15 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_215_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $2.15 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $3.65 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_365_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $3.65 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $6.85 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_685_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $6.85 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $10 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_1000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $10 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $20 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_2000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $20 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $30 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_3000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $30 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $40 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_4000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below $40 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - share of population below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_40_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - share of population below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_50_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - share of population below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_60_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - share of population below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_40_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - share of population below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_50_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - share of population below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_60_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_40_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_50_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_60_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_40_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 40% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_50_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 50% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_60_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income or consumption per person below 60% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Mean income or consumption per day (2011 prices)", "slug": "mean_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ at 2011 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The mean level of income or consumption per day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "BuGn", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;50;50.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Mean income or consumption per day (2017 prices)", "slug": "mean_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The mean level of income or consumption per day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "BuGn", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;50;50.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Median income or consumption per day (2011 prices)", "slug": "median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ at 2011 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of income or consumption per day below which half of the population live (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "BuGn", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;50;50.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Median income or consumption per day (2017 prices)", "slug": "median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of income or consumption per day below which half of the population live (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "BuGn", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;50;50.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "P10 (2011 prices)", "slug": "decile1_thr_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ at 2011 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of income or consumption per day below which 10% of the population falls (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Greens", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;20.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "P10 (2017 prices)", "slug": "decile1_thr_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of income or consumption per day below which 10% of the population falls (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Greens", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;20.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "P90 (2011 prices)", "slug": "decile9_thr_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ at 2011 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of income or consumption per day below which 90% of the population falls (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Blues", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;20;50;100;100.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "P90 (2017 prices)", "slug": "decile9_thr_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of income or consumption per day below which 90% of the population falls (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nDepending on the country and year, the data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits, or to consumption, per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Blues", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;20;50;100;100.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/income_2011_2017.csv", "income_2011_2017" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "income_2011_2017" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $1 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_100_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $1.90 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_190_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1.90 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $3.20 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_320_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.20 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $5.50 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_550_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $5.50 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $10 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_1000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $20 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_2000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $30 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_3000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $40 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_4000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $1 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_100_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $1 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $2.15 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_215_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $3.65 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_365_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $6.85 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_685_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $10 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_1000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $10 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $20 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_2000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $20 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $30 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_3000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $30 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $40 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_4000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below $40 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $1 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_100_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $1.90 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_190_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1.90 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $3.20 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_320_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.20 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $5.50 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_550_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $5.50 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $10 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_1000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $20 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_2000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $30 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_3000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $40 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_4000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $1 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_100_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $1 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $2.15 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_215_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $2.15 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $3.65 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_365_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $3.65 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $6.85 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_685_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $6.85 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $10 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_1000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $10 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $20 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_2000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $20 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $30 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_3000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $30 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $40 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_4000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below $40 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - share of population below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_40_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - share of population below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_50_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - share of population below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_60_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - share of population below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_40_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - share of population below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_50_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - share of population below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_60_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_40_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_50_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_60_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_40_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 40% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_50_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 50% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_60_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an income per person below 60% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Mean income per day (2011 prices)", "slug": "mean_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ at 2011 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The mean level of income per day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "BuGn", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;50;50.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Mean income per day (2017 prices)", "slug": "mean_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The mean level of income per day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "BuGn", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;50;50.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Median income per day (2011 prices)", "slug": "median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ at 2011 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of income per day below which half of the population live (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "BuGn", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;50;50.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Median income per day (2017 prices)", "slug": "median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of income per day below which half of the population live (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "BuGn", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;50;50.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "P10 (2011 prices)", "slug": "decile1_thr_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ at 2011 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of income per day below which 10% of the population falls (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Greens", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;20.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "P10 (2017 prices)", "slug": "decile1_thr_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of income per day below which 10% of the population falls (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Greens", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;20.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "P90 (2011 prices)", "slug": "decile9_thr_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ at 2011 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of income per day below which 90% of the population falls (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Blues", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;20;50;100;100.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "P90 (2017 prices)", "slug": "decile9_thr_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of income per day below which 90% of the population falls (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to income measured after taxes and benefits per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Blues", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;20;50;100;100.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" } ] }, { "args": [ "https://catalog.ourworldindata.org/explorers/wb/latest/world_bank_pip/consumption_2011_2017.csv", "consumption_2011_2017" ], "type": "table", "block": null }, { "args": [ "consumption_2011_2017" ], "type": "columns", "block": [ { "name": "Country", "slug": "country", "type": "EntityName", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Year", "slug": "year", "type": "Year", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $1 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_100_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $1.90 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_190_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1.90 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $3.20 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_320_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.20 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $5.50 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_550_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $5.50 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $10 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_1000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $20 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_2000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $30 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_3000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $40 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_4000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $1 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_100_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $2.15 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_215_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $3.65 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_365_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $6.85 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_685_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $10 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_1000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $20 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_2000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $30 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_3000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Share of population below $40 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_4000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "OrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "3;10;20;30;40;50;60;70;80;90;100", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $1 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_100_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $1.90 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_190_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1.90 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $3.20 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_320_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.20 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $5.50 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_550_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $5.50 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $10 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_1000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $20 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_2000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $30 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_3000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $40 a day (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_4000_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $1 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_100_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $1 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $2.15 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_215_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $2.15 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $3.65 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_365_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $3.65 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $6.85 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_685_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $6.85 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $10 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_1000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $10 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $20 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_2000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $20 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $30 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_3000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $30 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Number of people below $40 a day (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_4000_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below $40 a day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Reds", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - share of population below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_40_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - share of population below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_50_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - share of population below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_60_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - share of population below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_40_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - share of population below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_50_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - share of population below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_ratio_60_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "%", "shortUnit": "%", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "% of population living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrBr", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;15;20;25;30;30.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_40_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_50_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2011 prices)", "slug": "headcount_60_median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median (2011 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "40% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_40_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 40% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "50% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_50_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 50% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "60% of median - total number of people below poverty line (2017 prices)", "slug": "headcount_60_median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "Number of people living in households with an consumption per person below 60% of the median (2017 prices).\\n\\nThis is a measure of _relative_ poverty \u2013 it captures the share of people whose income is low by the standards typical in their own country.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "YlOrRd", "colorScaleNumericBins": "100000;300000;1000000;3000000;10000000;30000000;100000000;300000000;1000000000;1000000001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Mean consumption per day (2011 prices)", "slug": "mean_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ at 2011 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The mean level of consumption per day (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "BuGn", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;50;50.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Mean consumption per day (2017 prices)", "slug": "mean_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The mean level of consumption per day (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "BuGn", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;50;50.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Median consumption per day (2011 prices)", "slug": "median_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ at 2011 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of consumption per day below which half of the population live (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "BuGn", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;50;50.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "Median consumption per day (2017 prices)", "slug": "median_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of consumption per day below which half of the population live (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "BuGn", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;50;50.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "P10 (2011 prices)", "slug": "decile1_thr_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ at 2011 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of consumption per day below which 10% of the population falls (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Greens", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;20.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "P10 (2017 prices)", "slug": "decile1_thr_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of consumption per day below which 10% of the population falls (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Greens", "colorScaleNumericBins": "1;2;5;10;20;20.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "P90 (2011 prices)", "slug": "decile9_thr_ppp2011", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ at 2011 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of consumption per day below which 90% of the population falls (2011 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2011 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Blues", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;20;50;100;100.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" }, { "name": "P90 (2017 prices)", "slug": "decile9_thr_ppp2017", "type": "Numeric", "unit": "international-$ in 2017 prices", "shortUnit": "$", "tolerance": "5", "sourceLink": "https://pip.worldbank.org", "sourceName": "World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (2024)", "description": "The level of consumption per day below which 90% of the population falls (2017 prices).\\n\\nThe data is measured in international-$ at 2017 prices \u2013 this adjusts for inflation and for differences in the cost of living between countries.\\n\\nThe data relates to consumption per capita. 'Per capita' means that the incomes of each household are attributed equally to each member of the household (including children).\\n\\nNon-market sources of income, including food grown by subsistence farmers for their own consumption, are taken into account.\\n\\nNOTES ON HOW WE PROCESSED THIS INDICATOR\\n\\nFor most countries in the PIP dataset, estimates relate to _either_ disposable income or consumption, for all available years. A number of countries, however, have a mix of income and consumption data points, with both data types sometimes available for particular years.\\n\\nIn most of our charts, we present the data with some data points dropped in order to present single series for each country. This allows us to make readable visualizations that combine multiple countries and metrics. In choosing which data points to drop, we try to strike a balance between maintaining comparability over time and showing as long a time series as possible. As such, the exact approach varies somewhat across countries.\\n\\nIf you would like to see the original data with _all_ available income and consumption data points shown separately, you can do so in our [Poverty Data Explorer](https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/poverty-explorer?Indicator=Share+in+poverty&Poverty+line=%2410+per+day&Household+survey+data+type=Show+data+from+both+income+and+consumption+surveys&Show+breaks+between+less+comparable+surveys=true&country=ROU~CHN~BLR~PER). You can also download this data in our [complete dataset](https://github.com/owid/poverty-data#a-global-dataset-of-poverty-and-inequality-measures-prepared-by-our-world-in-data-from-the-world-banks-poverty-and-inequality-platform-pip-database) of the World Bank PIP data.", "dataPublishedBy": "World Bank (2024). Poverty and Inequality Platform (version 20240326_2017 and 20240326_2011) [Data set]. World Bank Group. https://pip.worldbank.org/. Accessed March 27, 2024.", "colorScaleScheme": "Blues", "colorScaleNumericBins": "5;10;20;50;100;100.0001", "colorScaleEqualSizeBins": "true", "colorScaleNumericMinValue": "0" } ] } ], "_version": 1, "selection": [ "Mozambique", "Nigeria", "Kenya", "Bangladesh", "Bolivia", "World" ], "wpBlockId": "57756", "entityType": "country or region", "googleSheet": "https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1mR0LPEGlY-wCp1q9lNTlDbVIG65JazKvHL16my9tH8Y", "explorerTitle": "Poverty - World Bank 2011 vs. 2017 prices", "explorerSubtitle": "Compare key poverty indicators from World Bank data in 2011 and 2017 prices." } |
2023-06-01 19:11:23 | 2024-06-25 11:17:24 |